Malaysia

Promise of instant riches leaves accountant RM155,000 poorer

An accountant becomes the latest victim of escalating online investment scams after allegedly losing more than RM155,000 to a fraudulent scheme promising doubled returns within 24 hours

Updated 1 month ago · Published on 14 May 2026 2:54PM

Promise of instant riches leaves accountant RM155,000 poorer
Investment scam epidemic underscores growing concerns over how sophisticated digital scams continue to exploit financial desperation and unrealistic profit expectations - May 14, 2026

THE growing culture of high-risk online investment schemes promising extraordinary returns within impossibly short periods continues to trap Malaysians from all professional backgrounds, with the latest victim allegedly losing more than RM155,000 in a sophisticated non-existent investment operation.

Police in Kulai revealed that a 47-year-old accountant lodged a report after discovering she had likely fallen prey to a syndicate offering unrealistic profits through a fraudulent digital investment platform.

Kulai District Police Chief Tan Seng Lee said the woman claimed she was lured by promises that her investments would generate doubled returns within just 24 hours.

“The victim became interested in the investment because she was promised doubled profits within 24 hours, and the suspect claimed the profits would be credited into the victim’s Antos Pinnacles application account,” he said in a statement.

According to investigators, the victim proceeded to make 17 separate bank transfers totalling RM155,182.97 into two local bank accounts between 30 March 2025 and 15 December 2025 after being persuaded by the apparent profitability displayed within the platform.

Police said the woman later checked the application and was shown supposed profits amounting to RM437,740, creating the illusion that the investment scheme was generating substantial returns.

However, when she attempted to withdraw the funds, she allegedly discovered that access to the account had been blocked.

“The victim, who suspected she had been deceived, came to the police station to lodge a report,” Tan said.

The case is now being investigated under Section 420 of the Penal Code for cheating involving a non-existent investment scheme.

Beyond the individual losses, the case highlights a wider and increasingly dangerous trend in Malaysia’s digital fraud landscape, where criminal syndicates exploit financial anxieties and the attraction of rapid wealth through convincing online platforms, fabricated profit dashboards and psychological manipulation.

Scam operators increasingly rely on tactics designed to mimic legitimate investment ecosystems, often using professionally designed applications, fake account balances and promises of extraordinary returns to build trust before eventually restricting withdrawals.

Financial crime investigators have repeatedly warned that offers guaranteeing unusually high profits within extremely short timeframes remain among the clearest indicators of fraud, yet such schemes continue to attract victims across different income and professional groups.

Tan urged members of the public to remain vigilant and avoid investment offers that promise unrealistic returns over short periods.

“Members of the public are also advised to utilise online services provided by the Commercial Crime Investigation Department such as the National Scam Response Centre (NSRC), the CCID Infoline, Semak Mule, and to obtain the latest information regarding commercial crime modus operandi through the official Royal Malaysia Police Facebook page,” he said. - May 14, 2026

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